by Neil M. Gunn
When they came upon the cottage they involuntarily stood at a little distance from it. It was a long building on a very slight slope, the upper part being the dwelling-house, the lower part the byre. The dwelling-house had a tarred felt roof; the byre was thatched, with weeds growing out of the old straw. The door of the byre stood open, but the entrance to the dwelling-house had been boarded up; the new nailed planks were like scars. The two small windows were dark and blind. They had expected an air of death and desertion but not this ominous stillness, this feeling that the acts of the horrid drama had been left invisibly behind. Nan went slowly forward. Aunt Phemie glanced about her but could not raise her voice to call Nan. She tried to be sensible and glance around, but her eyes on their own were searching ahead for the police inspector’s story in the mud. Some hens’ feathers about her feet and the deep cloven imprints of hoofs in the grass startled her into realising that, of course, there must have been animal life about the place. She wondered who had taken the living things away and thought of the police. Nan was standing at a little distance from the door of the cottage and Aunt Phemie could see she was hesitating about going to the kitchen window to look in. As she went and took Nan’s arm she said quietly, “Come, let us go.” Nan regarded her with a curious, remote smile. “Wait,” she said and left Aunt Phemie, going down towards the byre. She passed the open door slowly, like a curious schoolgirl, and, with a look over her shoulder at Aunt Phemie, disappeared round the lower end of the cottage. Aunt Phemie started after her, then stopped. A touch of panic or anger made her want to shout to Nan to come back. She stood, feeling a horrible nakedness in their intrusion, and glanced about her. This was awful. She waited, suddenly aware that she was guarding the eyes of the windows from Nan. But after a time she could wait no longer and started down towards the byre. A light-voiced “Hullo!” swung her back. Nan had gone right round the building and was now coming to meet her. Aunt Phemie’s expression did not soften. “Let us go,” she said, turning away, and they left the cottage, walking in silence.
They went over the rise, saw the moor stretching away below them, the Dark Wood, the fields of Aunt Phemie’s farm, and the whole broad familiar valley. The sun had set beyond the mountains; its great afterglow was hazed and silver-molten, with red on massive cloud banks in the south. Nan looked at it all but did not speak. Aunt Phemie took the slanting path down the slope, and presently left it to follow a narrow track amid tall bracken. As Nan contemplated Aunt Phemie’s purposeful back, she smiled to herself in a truant way. As they neared the bottom, she asked, “You’re not annoyed with me, are you, Aunt Phemie?”
“No,” replied Aunt Phemie calmly and without turning round, “but I didn’t like it.”
“I didn’t like it either,” said Nan, “but I’m glad I did it.”
As they came out of the bracken on a last few yards of green slope, Aunt Phemie stopped.
“You see,” said Nan coming beside her, “I had to be freed from it.”
Aunt Phemie looked at her, at the shy searching humour in the eyes, and said, “You’re just a monkey!”
Nan caught her arm affectionately. “Let us sit down. I’m tired.”
They sat down. “You’ll forgive me, my dear,” said Aunt Phemie. “I hadn’t thought of it like that. I suppose I felt I should have kept you from it.”
“Oh, Aunt Phemie,” said Nan, “you make me feel a fraud. You’re so good to me. Do you know what I did, what I wanted to do?”
Aunt Phemie looked at her.
“You may think it childish, but try to understand, too. Will you?”
“Proceed,” said Aunt Phemie.
“All these figures of men stalking about, and murder. Did you feel them,” she asked in a quieter voice, “about the old cottage?”
“Well?” Aunt Phemie waited.
“I put,” said Nan, “a sun-circle round the cottage. I thought that might help.”
“Perhaps it will,” said Aunt Phemie.
“I know what you are thinking. You are thinking: So long as it will help me.” Nan nodded. “But I also said a few words. I won’t tell you what. Words of peace—for those gone and for those to come. That’s all.”
“That was very lovely of you, my dear,” said Aunt Phemie, moved.
“What more can we do?” asked Nan.
“If only we could all do that.”
“I know,” said Nan, “and oh! if only we could be free to talk like this, naturally; not to see the sneering face.”
There was silence for a little and then Aunt Phemie felt, from a glimpse of Nan’s expression which had gone still and serious, that all this play was leading to something more definite.
“I am going back to London. I have made up my mind, Aunt Phemie. I am going to help Ranald all I can. I shall give him all that’s in me. But I shall never betray—this world—all this, that’s in me and you. That’s, maybe, all I have to give.”
Aunt Phemie could not speak.
“Perhaps you don’t agree with me,” said Nan. “Maybe I understand that, too. But it’s what I have got to do. And this time—I’ll not break easily.” She smiled.
“You feel that’s your duty? What you can do for yourself and the world?” asked Aunt Phemie quietly.
Nan glanced at her and then picked about the grass with her fingers. “You are forgetting what we found at the bottom of the well of the world.”
Aunt Phemie looked at her.
Nan met the look for a moment with bright glancing eyes. “Love,” she murmured.
Aunt Phemie sat quite still, staring over the moor. Then she nodded. Nan, with a quick look, saw that tears had come into her eyes; in her own profound way, Aunt Phemie had at last understood and agreed.
As they went on, Nan said, “We’ll go back through the Dark Wood; it’s on our way home anyway.”
Aunt Phemie, through a sudden deeper meaning in the simple words, smiled to her. In a moment Nan was delighted and caught her arm. But some little distance from the wood, Nan stopped dramatically. “Listen!” she said, breathless in the vivid moment. A bird was singing in the Dark Wood.